Opinion
In this action, Joanne Sandra Dale (Joanne) alleged that during the course of a marital dissolution proceeding her former husband, defendant Thomas Redding Dale (Thomas), and the bookkeeper for his medical practice, defendant Chun Wei Dale (Chun Wei), concealed from Joanne certain community assets related to the practice. Joanne claimed that as a result of the concealment, she was induced to forego spousal support and to stipulate that Thomas be awarded the practice without full knowledge of the assets contained therein. Joanne sought compensatory and punitive damages under a variety of tort theories. The trial court dismissed the action for lack of jurisdiction, concluding Joanne’s exclusive remedy lay in seeking to set aside the judgment of dissolution in the family court. We hold that in the absence of a pending dissolution proceeding, a plaintiff who contends she suffered injury because her former spouse tortiously concealed community assets from her, thereby preventing her from fully presenting her case in the dissolution proceeding, is entitled to bring a subsequent tort action based on the alleged concealment. Accordingly, we reverse the order of dismissal.
Factual and Procedural Background
Because the trial court dismissed the action based on the pleadings, for purposes of review we accept as true all material facts alleged in the third amended complaint, which was the operative version of the complaint at the time of dismissal. (See
Macias
v.
State of California
(1995)
Joanne and Thomas were married in 1970. In 1984 Joanne initiated a marital dissolution proceeding. A judgment of dissolution was entered in 1985; however, the court reserved jurisdiction over the disposal of certain community assets. In 1988, pursuant to stipulation, a supplemental judgment was entered
Five years later, in August 1993, while seeking to increase child support for her two children, Joanne obtained from a certified public accountant certain financial documents related to the medical practice. Upon review of those documents, Joanne discovered that financial documents Thomas produced to her in the course of the dissolution proceeding had been altered. According to Joanne, beginning in 1984, when Thomas was served with notice of the dissolution proceeding, Thomas and Chun Wei withheld from billing patients, withheld moneys received as payments to the accounts receivable of the medical practice, and otherwise acted so as to artificially reduce the value of the practice. Chun Wei prepared false ledgers, financial statements, income tax returns and other business records to conceal the withheld billings and payments. Thomas actively concealed the existence of the withheld billings and payments and affirmatively misrepresented to Joanne that his practice was experiencing financial difficulties and was near insolvency. As a result of the concealment of the withheld billings and payments by Thomas and Chun Wei, Joanne was induced to forego spousal support and to stipulate that Thomas be awarded the practice as his separate property.
In December 1993 Joanne commenced this action against Thomas and Chun Wei based on their alleged concealment of Thomas’s true income and financial condition. Following several demurrers, Joanne filed a third amended complaint which stated claims against Thomas and Chun Wei on a variety of legal theories, including breach of fiduciary duty, fraud, constructive fraud, intentional and negligent misrepresentation, conversion, conspiracy, fraudulent conveyance, constructive trust, and declaratory relief. Joanne sought both compensatory and punitive damages.
The trial court apparently overruled a demurrer to the third amended complaint based on the “litigation privilege” (Civ. Code, § 47, subd. (b)). 1 Defendants later filed a motion for summary judgment on the same ground, asserting that Joanne’s claims were barred by the privilege because the claims were based on statements and communications by parties to a judicial proceeding. The trial court denied the summary judgment motion without prejudice due to a deficiency in defendants’ evidence, and defendants later refiled the motion. The court issued a tentative ruling denying the motion and then took the matter under submission following oral argument.
While the motion for summary judgment was still under submission, the case was called for trial. At the outset, the trial court indicated that it would allow the jury to decide the issue of fraud, but it would not allow the jury to fix damages. The court indicated that if the jury found fraud, the court would send the case to the family court 2 for “further adjudication.” After an extended discussion with counsel during which defense counsel argued the family court had “exclusive jurisdiction” over the matter, the court agreed to allow the parties to brief the issue of the court’s jurisdiction. Defendants argued that because the family court had continuing jurisdiction to determine spousal support and to award community assets not previously adjudicated, Joanne’s sole remedy lay in that court. Joanne argued that she was entitled to elect between pursuing a remedy in the family court and pursuing an independent civil action for damages and equitable relief.
Following the completion of briefing, the trial court issued an order tentatively dismissing the case on the grounds that the court did not have jurisdiction “to hear matters previously determined and adjudicated
Discussion
I
Subject Matter Jurisdiction
The parties suggest the issue presented here is whether the trial court had
subject matter
jurisdiction over this action. We disagree. In this case, Joanne seeks an award of compensatory and punitive damages for pecuniary injury she allegedly sustained as a result of defendants’ tortious conduct.
3
The superior court has subject matter jurisdiction over a tort action where the
amount in controversy exceeds $25,000.
4
(See
Ash
v.
Hertz Corp.
(1997)
We believe that in dismissing this case for lack of “jurisdiction,” the trial court used that term in its broader sense, as articulated by the California Supreme Court in
Abelleira
v.
District Court of Appeal
(1941)
In ruling that it lacked jurisdiction in this case, the trial court cited several provisions of the Family Code which provide that the court in a dissolution proceeding has continuing jurisdiction to order the payment of spousal support and to award community assets which have not been previously adjudicated. (See Fam. Code, §§ 2552, 2556, 4330, 4336.) Because the damages sought here relate to spousal support and community assets Joanne claims she forfeited as a result of defendants’ tortious conduct, the trial court apparently concluded that it had no “jurisdiction” to grant Joanne the relief she sought and that her only recourse was to seek to reopen the dissolution proceeding so she could pursue directly in that proceeding an award of spousal support and a division of the concealed assets. Accordingly, the question presented here is not one of the court’s subject matter jurisdiction, but of the court’s “jurisdiction” (or power) to grant relief in an action for damages stemming from the tortious concealment of community assets in a dissolution proceeding. For the reasons that follow, we conclude that the court does have the power to grant relief in such an action.
II
Viability of Tort Action for Concealment of Community Assets
In defense of the trial court’s ruling, defendants argue that “the Family Court is the only court that can decide issues of community property
and spousal support.”
Joanne acknowledges the continuing jurisdiction of the family court in the dissolution proceeding to award spousal support and divide omitted community assets. She argues, however, that
“continuing
jurisdiction does not equate to
exclusive
jurisdiction” and that she has the right to elect her remedy and proceed with an action for damages. (Original italics.) In support of her argument, Joanne relies primarily on
Worton
v.
Worton
(1991)
In Worton, a wife sued her former husband for damages for fraud and conversion, alleging that during the course of their marital dissolution proceeding he concealed the existence of certain excess assets in a pension plan. 6 (Worton v. Worton, supra, 234 Cal.App.3d at pp. 1643-1644.) The husband obtained summary judgment on the ground that the action against him was barred by the doctrine of res judicata. (Id. at pp. 1644-1646.) The Court of Appeal reversed, holding that res judicata did not apply because the husband’s “failure to reveal the existence of the excess assets to plaintiff . . . deprived her of an opportunity fully to present her case in the dissolution proceeding.” (Id. at p. 1649.)
Joanne contends that
Worton
“is on all fours with the instant case in all pertinent respects.” We disagree. It is true the court in
Worton
allowed the plaintiff to proceed with her action for damages against her former husband based on his fraudulent concealment of community assets during the dissolution proceeding. However, the court in
Worton
apparently was not presented with, and therefore did not address, the argument defendants make
here: namely, that a plaintiff in such a case is not entitled to pursue an action for damages but is instead limited to seeking relief from the family court by moving to set aside the judgment of dissolution. (See
d’Elia
v.
d’Elia
(1997)
Joanne also relies on
In re Marriage of McNeill
(1984)
Although
McNeill
is of little direct assistance, it does illustrate the general rule that one spouse may sue the other for intentional or negligent torts.
8
(See
Nagy
v.
Nagy
(1989)
Defendants contend the decision in
d’Elia
v.
d’Elia, supra,
In framing arguments to justify the trial court’s dismissal of this action, defendants for the most part fail to acknowledge that this case is an action for damages resulting from allegedly tortious conduct. Instead, defendants characterize this case as an attempt by Joanne to relitigate spousal support and community property issues already resolved in the dissolution proceeding. Defendants contend that “once the Family Court acquires jurisdiction over community property it retains exclusive jurisdiction over that property.” Citing
Williams
v.
Superior Court
(1939)
The cases on which defendants rely do not support their argument. In
Williams
v.
Superior Court, supra,
In
In re Marriage of Schenck
(1991)
In
Askew
v.
Askew
(1994)
Taken together,
Williams, Schenck,
and
Askew
stand for the proposition that when a dissolution proceeding is pending in the family court, another department of the superior court may not act so as to interfere with the family court’s exercise of its powers in that proceeding. (See, e.g.,
Glade
v.
Glade
(1995)
III
Res Judicata
To the extent defendants argue the dismissal of Joanne’s action for damages was justified on the basis of res judicata, we disagree. To that argument, the decision in
Worton
speaks directly. As the
Worton
court explained: “ ‘The doctrine of res judicata, whether applied as a total bar to further litigation or as collateral estoppel, rests upon the sound policy of limiting litigation by preventing a party who has had
one fair adversary hearing
on an issue from again drawing it into controversy and subjecting the other party to further expense in its reexamination.’ ”
(Worton
v.
Worton, supra,
234 Cal.App.3d at pp. 1647-1648, quoting
Vella
v.
Hudgins
(1977)
IV
Litigation Privilege
Defendants also attempt to justify the dismissal of Joanne’s action for damages on the basis of the “litigation privilege.” (Civ. Code, § 47, subd. (b).) According to defendants, Joanne’s claims are barred by the privilege because they are “based entirely on statements, communications and publications by parties and their counsel to a judicial proceeding.” We conclude, however, that the litigation privilege issue is not properly before us. As noted above, at the time the trial court dismissed the action for lack of jurisdiction, defendants’ motion for summary judgment based on the litigation privilege was still under submission. The trial court must be allowed to rule on that motion in the first instance. Accordingly, we do not reach the issue of whether the litigation privilege applies to this case. 10
V
Public Policy
Finally, to the extent defendants suggest Joanne should be barred from pursuing her action for damages for reasons of public policy, we disagree. It is true that in some instances the courts have concluded that allowing a remedy in tort would be contrary to public policy. (See, e.g., Nagy v. Nagy, supra, 210 Cal.App.3d at pp. 1269-1270.) This is not such a case.
Defendants suggest that because “Civil Court judges are not trained to render decisions in this field of expertise, the Family Court is the only court that can decide issues of community property and spousal support.” That the damages Joanne seeks are related to forfeited spousal support and community assets—matters with which family court judges are undoubtedly more familiar—does not alone justify limiting Joanne to those remedies that may be available in the dissolution proceeding. We see no reason why a properly instructed jury cannot be trusted to determine the value of the pecuniary injury suffered by a plaintiff who alleges her former spouse tortiously concealed community assets from her in the dissolution proceeding. (See d’Elia v. d’Elia, supra, 58 Cal.App.4th at pp. 423, 433 [affirming an award of $3.9 million on common law claims against former spouse for misrepresenting value of community stock].)
Although we recognize the “important policies against creating tort remedies for litigation-related misconduct”
(Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
v.
Superior Court, supra,
Second, the court’s reliance in
Cedars-Sinai
on the adequacy of “nontort remedies that seek to punish and deter the intentional spoliation of evidence” is not compelling here because of the different circumstances involved.
(Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
v.
Superior Court, supra,
Setting aside the supplemental judgment adjudicating Joanne’s support rights and interest in the community property would not provide Joanne with a remedy equivalent to that traditionally available to a person injured by intentional tortious conduct. As the court observed in
d’Elia
v.
d’Elia, supra,
The concern that permitting tort actions under circumstances such as those present here will result in a flood of frivolous litigation does not justify limiting a victimized spouse to the remedies available in family court. As the Supreme Court has observed, arguments proposing a limit on tort actions because of an anticipated flood of trifling lawsuits “are not relevant in an intentional tort case.”
(Self v. Self, supra,
Furthermore, there is no evidence before us that any such inundation will occur. Indeed, San Diego County Certified Family Law Specialists (the association), a countywide association of specialists in this area, contends otherwise. In its amicus curiae brief, the association contends the “fraudulent fabrication of documents and perjured testimony” is “the exception rather than the rule” in family law cases. The association further notes that “[cjontingency attorney fee[] arrangements will screen the specious claims, if any, from the meritorious.” Finally, the association contends “a decision that permits tort litigation when fraud is present will ultimately limit fraudulent conduct and the number of subsequent lawsuits.”
We agree that public policy supports permitting rather than prohibiting tort actions in circumstances such as those alleged to be present here. Allowing a spouse who intentionally concealed the existence of community assets during the course of a dissolution proceeding to avoid liability for punitive damages likely would encourage such tortious behavior. A spouse would be able to practice concealment with little, if any, risk. (Cf.
Resnik
v.
Superior Court
(1986)
In summary, we find no policy reason to prohibit a spouse like Joanne from pursuing a tort action for damages against her former spouse based on the alleged concealment of community assets. In the absence of a pending dissolution proceeding in which the parties’ property and support rights have yet to be finally determined, 11 a plaintiff who contends she suffered injury because her former spouse tortiously concealed community assets from her, thereby preventing her from fully presenting her case in the dissolution proceeding, is entitled to bring a subsequent tort action based on the alleged concealment.
Disposition
The order of dismissal is reversed. Appellant to recover costs on appeal.
Benke, Acting P. J., and Haller, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied October 20, 1998, and respondents’ petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied January 13, 1999. Mosk, J., and Kennard, J., were of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
Notes
The record on appeal does not contain any of the moving or opposing papers related to the demurrer to the third amended complaint.
As the California Supreme Court explained in
In re Chantal S.
(1996)
According to Joanne, she was injured by defendants’ conduct because she “was induced to forego spousal support, was deprived of her rightful community interest in [Thomas’s medical practice], and was further precluded from fully and fairly litigating the division of [the] concealed assets in the previous dissolution action . . . .”
Here, Joanne alleged the amount of her claim was “unknown at this time, but believed to be in an amount of at least $1,000,000.00.”
Under case law, after the expiration of the six-month period for seeking relief pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 473 on grounds of mistake, inadvertence, surprise or excusable neglect, an otherwise valid and final judgment adjudicating support or division of community property could be set aside only if it was obtained through extrinsic fraud. (See
In re Marriage of Stevenot
(1984)
The wife also sued her former attorney for legal malpractice for negligently failing to discover the existence of the excess assets. The Court of Appeal affirmed a summary judgment in favor of the attorney on the ground that wife’s claim was barred by the statute of limitations.
For similar reasons, the decision in
McDaniel
v.
McDaniel
(1969)
Even before the California Supreme Court abrogated interspousal immunity for personal torts in 1962 (see
Self
v.
Self
(1962)
d’Elia
is also distinguishable from this case because the wrongful conduct at issue in
d’Elia
did not involve the actual concealment of community property, as Joanne has alleged here. (See
d’Elia
v.
d’Elia, supra,
We do note, however, that the trial court tentatively denied defendants’ motion for summary judgment based on the litigation privilege on the ground that there were triable issues of fact as to the application of the privilege.
We express no opinion as to whether a tort action may be maintained when the dissolution proceeding has not yet resulted in a. judgment finally adjudicating the parties’ property and support rights.
